in philadelphia, connecticut, the damage and cost to local government. so, i would put forward a bill, there will be a bill to provide emergency funding because the storm, as there always is, and the question about, you know, when we move and how we move it. i think we should move forward aggressively now because you know, i heard on fox business that it's 25 billion in retail sale losses, i mean, we -- there's going to be a real economic consequence here and we need to respond. >> neil: you know, maybe i'm maybe the only one in the country that doesn't share your enthusiasm for fema because i saw a lot of fema officials and others slapping themselves on the back about the great job they're doing, congressman and looking at staten island and looking off the jersey coast and seeing, well, they're obviously unaware or not addressing some of the real problems out there. they're still a lot of ridiculous things like texting and tweeting people about what they can do, and the people have no power and no phones. this is part and parcel of the problem, if you'r